Just gotta rant a little. About a month ago our auto insurance bill got returned to our local agent and marked "return to sender, unable to deliver". My wife googled US postal service and called the 1-800 number that popped up. She told the person on the line what was going on and would like to confirm our physical address with them so we wouldn't have trouble getting our mail. She was told nobody there has access to that information. WTF? How does no one at the postal service have that info. She spent a good hour on the phone even speaking to a "supervisor" and being told the same thing by them. The supervisor said its because we hadn't filled out a change of address form. It took 3 times for this guy to understand we hadn't moved so that form wasn't filled out for a reason.

So now we've been waiting on a $2500 aflac check and had to have them put a stop payment on it cause only god knows where it is. Anybody else have this kind of trouble with them?

Have you asked Aflac to verify your address? Are you getting your other mail?

__________________

"The whole of the Bill (of Rights) is a declaration of the right of the people at large or considered as individuals.... It establishes some rights of the individual as unalienable and which consequently, no majority has a right to deprive them of." (Albert Gallatin of the New York Historical Society, October 7, 1789)

"A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government." - George Washington

The U.S. Postal Service said its net loss last year widened to $15.9 billion, more than the $15 billion it had projected, as mail volume continued to drop, falling 5 percent.
Without action by Congress, the service will run out of cash on Oct. 15, 2013, after it makes a required workers compensation payment to the U.S. Labor Department and before revenue typically jumps with holiday-season mailing, Chief Financial Officer Joe Corbett said today.
The service, whose fiscal year ends Sept. 30, lost $5.1 billion a year earlier. It announced the 2012 net loss at a meeting at its Washington headquarters.
We are walking a financial tightrope, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said at the meeting. Will we ever stop delivering the mail? It will never happen. We are simply too important to the economy and the flow of commerce.
The Postal Service uses about $250 million a day to operate and will have less than four days of cash on hand by the end of the fiscal year, Corbett said.
The service is asking Congress to enact legislation before it adjourns this year that would allow the Postal Service to spread future retirees health-benefit payments over more years, stop Saturday mail delivery, and more easily close post offices and processing plants. Over Edge
The Postal Service is facing a fiscal cliff of its own and any unanticipated drop in mail volumes could send the agency over the edge, said Art Sackler, co-coordinator of the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service, whose members include Bank of America Corp. and EBay Inc. (EBAY) If Congress fails to act, there could be postal slowdowns or shutdowns that would have catastrophic consequences for the 8 million private sector workers whose jobs depend on the mail.

Aw, cut em some slack, their worried about their jobs.

__________________Cheers,
GregMSgt, USAF, RetiredNRA Life MemberThe hardest thing to explain is the glaringly evident which everybody had decided not to see. - Ayn Rand

Have you asked Aflac to verify your address? Are you getting your other mail?

Yes aflac has the correct address and they aren't involved with both snafu's. The first was our auto insurance statement. Wasn't much of an issue with it as our agent is close by, wife just went and got the statement after work.